4.7 Article

Evolutionary characteristics and phylogeny of cotton chloroplast tRNAs

Journal

PLANTA
Volume 254, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00425-021-03775-1

Keywords

Gossypium; Chloroplast tRNA; Duplication; Transition; Phylogenetic relationships

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key R & D Program for Crop Breeding [2016YFD0100306]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31401431]
  3. Shaanxi Science and Technology Innovation Team [2019TD-012]
  4. Fourth National Survey of Traditional Chinese Medicine Resources [2019-39]
  5. Open Foundation of Key Laboratory of Resource Biology and Biotechnology in Western China (Ministry of Education) [ZSK2019008]

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Novel structural variations were identified in cotton chloroplast tRNAs, and gene loss events were more prominent than duplications in chloroplast tRNAs. Analysis of 27 Gossypium species' chloroplast tRNAs revealed new tRNA structural variations in cotton plants.
Main conclusion The novel structural variations were identified in cotton chloroplast tRNAs and gene loss events were more obvious than duplications in chloroplast tRNAs. Transfer RNAs (tRNA) have long been believed an evolutionary-conserved molecular family, which play the key roles in the process of protein biosynthesis in plant life activities. In this study, we detected the evolutionary characteristics and phylogeny of chloroplast tRNAs in cotton plants, an economic and fibered important taxon in the world. We firstly annotated the chloroplast tRNAs of 27 Gossypium species to analyze their genetic composition, structural characteristics and evolution. Compared with the traditional view of evolutionary conservation of tRNA, some novel tRNA structural variations were identified in cotton plants. I.g., tRNA(Val)-UAC and tRNA(Ile)-GAU only contained one intron in the anti-condon loop region of tRNA secondary structure, respectively. In the variable region, some tRNAs contained a circle structure with a few nucleotides. Interestingly, the calculation result of free energy indicated that the variation of novel tRNAs contributed to the stability of tRNA structure. Phylogenetic analysis suggested that chloroplast tRNAs have evolved from multiple common ancestors, and the tRNA(Met) seemed to be an ancestral tRNA, which can be duplicated and diversified to produce other tRNAs. The chloroplast tRNAs contained a group I intron in cotton plants, and the evolutionary analysis of introns indicated that group I intron of chloroplast tRNA originated from cyanobacteria. Analysis of gene duplication and loss events showed that gene loss events were more obvious than duplications in Gossypium chloroplast tRNAs. Additionally, we found that the rate of transition was higher than the ones of transversion in cotton chloroplast tRNAs. This study provided new insights into the structural characteristics and evolution of chloroplast tRNAs in cotton plants.

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